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Georgia Department of Education
Literacy for Learning, Living and Leading Grant L4GA: Competition General Application Information
Georgia Department of Education
Richard Woods, State Superintendent of Schools
October 27, 2017 • Page 1 of 15
All Rights Reserved
Contents
GENERAL INFORMATION ...................................................................................................... 1
COMMUNICATION ...................................................................................................... 2
ALLOWABLE EXPENSES ............................................................................................. 2
EXAMPLES OF ALLOWABLE EXPENDITURES ....... ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED.
DISTRICT PERFORMANCE PLANNING AND BUDGET TIMELINES .............................. 5
ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA .............................................................................................. 6
COLLABORATION WITH NON-PROFIT AGENCIES AND ORGANIZATIONS ...... ERROR!
BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED.
RESAS AS FISCAL AGENTS .................................. ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED.
NON-LEA APPLICANTS ONLY ............................. ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED.
FIDELITY TO THE APPLICATION ................................................................................ 6
PROJECT ACTIVITIES............................................ ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED.
COMPREHENSIVE READING SOLUTIONS .............. ERROR! BOOKMARK NOT DEFINED.
SCORING ..................................................................................................................... 6
COMPETITIVE PRIORITY ........................................................................................... 6
GRANT PERIOD ........................................................................................................ 10
AWARDS ................................................................................................................... 10
AWARD AMOUNTS ................................................................................................... 11
SUSTAINABILITY ...................................................................................................... 11
FISCAL REQUIREMENTS .......................................................................................... 11
PROJECT REPORTS AND EVALUATION .................................................................... 13
FLUID REVIEW ......................................................................................................... 14
APPLICATION REVIEW AND SELECTION PROCESS ................................................... 14
PHASE 1 – READER REVIEW AND SCORING ............................................................ 14
PHASE 2 – FEDERAL COMPLIANCE REVIEW AND ANALYSIS OF APPLICATIONS ... 14
General Information
The purpose for these funds is to allow systems/agencies/organizations to begin to develop and
implement a literacy plan that would address the needs of all of children in a community, from
birth through grade twelve.
Georgia Department of Education
Richard Woods, State Superintendent of Schools
October 27, 2017 • Page 2 of 15
All Rights Reserved
The Literacy for Learning, Living and Leading in Georgia (L4GA) funding will allow
systems/agencies/organizations to build partnerships that engage communities and schools
together to strengthen student learning, and establish and train teachers to implement new
evidence-based practices with the ultimate goal that upon graduation, all students will be college
and career ready. L4GA requires that applicants attend to the convergent power of improving
school climate, community partnerships, instruction, and professional learning.
L4GA funds alone will not support a major overhaul of a school’s literacy program. The
projects that will be funded will support a school’s intention to build on their current best
practices, enhance instruction, solidify an intentional assessment protocol, and ensure that all
teachers, leaders, and ancillary staff are confident in their approach to student learning.
Applications are to be submitted in Fluid Review by Thursday, February 1, 5PM.
Communication
If you would like to request membership on the L4GA listserv, please send a blank email to join-
L4GA Project Staff
Allowable Expenses
L4GA funding should be used to fill gaps determined through the needs assessment process.
Grant proposals should verify how all resources available within communities and schools have
been leveraged and how they will be coordinated. Project funds must be used for activities that
directly support the accomplishment of the project purpose, priorities, and expected outcomes.
Expenditures must be consistent with applicable state and federal laws, regulations, and
guidance.
Julie Morrill
L4GA Project Director
706-473-3159
Georgia Department of Education
Richard Woods, State Superintendent of Schools
October 27, 2017 • Page 3 of 15
All Rights Reserved
Project Purpose and Goals Table 1
System-level Roles and Expectations
Who What
Students (birth
through grade 12)
Students
(Prekindergarten to
grade 5)
Students (grades 6-
12)
Will have access to high-quality materials in both print and digital form,
fiction and non-fiction, that support the Georgia Standards of Excellence
in all content areas.
Will receive an evidence-based curriculum that will ensure adequate
delivery of the Georgia Standards of Excellence.
Will receive an evidence-based literacy block that includes all elements of
a comprehensive literacy program (e.g., dialogic reading, peer-assisted
learning, small group reading interventions, developing academic English,
explicit comprehension strategy instruction, explicit vocabulary
instruction) using a variety of engaging, high-quality texts.
Will receive evidence-based instruction in Literacy (Reading, Writing,
Listening, Speaking, Viewing) within content area courses using evidence-
based delivery models as well as robust, engaging text.
Teachers of
literacy (birth
through grade 12)
Will engage learners by establishing a positive learning climate and using
instructional approaches that are responsive to the community (e.g.,
linguistically, culturally, developmentally appropriate).
Will implement ongoing formative and summative assessments and use
data to inform instructional decisions and to evaluate the effectiveness of
instruction.
Will engage in high-quality professional learning to build their competence
in evidence-based practices in literacy instruction, delivery of content, and
peer support.
Georgia Department of Education
Richard Woods, State Superintendent of Schools
October 27, 2017 • Page 4 of 15
All Rights Reserved
School leadership
teams
Will engage in high-quality professional learning to build their
competence in evidence-based practices for literacy instruction and
evaluation of instructional performance.
Will demonstrate commitment to literacy by convening partners (teachers,
community organizations, families, students) to focus on literacy-related
services and activities together.
School and District
leaders
Will use local and state data to create literacy plans for feeder patterns,
focusing on growing potential for the local community to meet the needs
of children from birth through grade 12.
Will ensure that grants funded to L4GA partnerships are supported
through proper and timely allocations and resources.
Will ensured that the district goals align, and do not conflict, with those of
the funded schools.
Will facilitate partnerships with community organizations to provide
social services for families and children attending local schools.
Teacher
educators/literacy
researchers
Will partner with B-12 teachers and leaders to lead professional learning
about evidence-based practices for literacy instruction.
Will engage in a networked improvement community called the “Literacy
Think Tank” to improve their own competence in evidence-based
practices in literacy instruction.
Will engage with local community partners to support literacy-related
activities and communications for families, youth, and children.
Georgia Department of Education
Richard Woods, State Superintendent of Schools
October 27, 2017 • Page 5 of 15
All Rights Reserved
Community
members
Will provide support services for children, youth and families as
determined by the local needs defined by the partnership.
Will demonstrate commitment to literacy by providing and supporting
literacy-related activities and communications for families, youth, and
children.
GaDOE Will align SEA initiatives and requirements as much as possible and
support sub-grantees by provide guidance about alignments.
Will deliver a communications system provides real-time access updated
online and face to face training as well as assessment windows and new
resources both internal and developed by outside partners.
Will provide state data to support local efforts.
Will convene and facilitate teacher educators and literacy researchers to
improve the network’s capacity and competence.
Will facilitate a comprehensive approach to professional learning that
promotes evidence-based practices and involves alignments face-to-face
statewide convenings, online learning, and on-site interactions among
sub-grantee partnerships via professional learning communities and
coaching.
District Performance Planning and Budget Timelines
Districts awarded a grant award will be notified of their entire award. These funds will be spent
over the three-year grant cycle upon successful yearly implementation.
Year-one funding will be requested for approval in June 2018. These funds will be available
July 1, 2018 until June 30, 2019. In order to request funding, each school will be required to
submit a detailed performance plan and budget timeline. These documents will be reviewed and
approved by GaDOE staff and together with budget requests presented to the State Board of
Education for approval.
Georgia Department of Education
Richard Woods, State Superintendent of Schools
October 27, 2017 • Page 6 of 15
All Rights Reserved
Performance plans and budget time line documents will be provided to systems upon receiving
funding.
Eligibility Criteria
All LEAs in Georgia are eligible to apply for L4GA funding.
Fidelity to the Application
Sub-grantees will not be permitted to change the project’s overall scope originally outlined in the
application, scored by reviewers during the application review process, and approved by the
SBOE. This policy is designed to provide basic fairness to applicants for discretionary sub-
grants. Amendments to the project specific to implementation and initiatives can be amended per
approval from the program manager.
Scoring
In order for any application to be considered for funding it must meet a minimum quality score
of 75 points. In the event that one or more school applications receive a score below 75 but the
total system average score is above 75, the school application will require technical assistance to
bring the schools sub-grant in line with the tenets of the grant or remove the school’s application.
Competitive Priority Please note that priority points will be added only after the application has met the minimum quality score
of 75.
Table 2
Prioritization of Sub-grants Based on 2-Year Growth Rates and Poverty
System
ID System Name
Against
Odds
Total
Compe
titive
Priorit
System
ID System Name
Against
Odds
Total
Comp
etitive
Priori
Georgia Department of Education
Richard Woods, State Superintendent of Schools
October 27, 2017 • Page 7 of 15
All Rights Reserved
y
Points
ty
Points
730 Talbot County -62.31 20 653 Emanuel County 1.85 10
743 Twiggs County -54.08 20 689 Liberty County 1.93 10
718 Quitman County -53.30 20 710 Paulding County 2.23 10
694 Macon County -52.76 20 621 Candler County 2.24 10
670 Hancock County -50.17 20 617 Burke County 2.27 10
749 Warren County -47.86 20 786 Social Circle City 2.64 10
776 Gainesville City -44.43 20 792 Valdosta City 3.24 10
646 Dooly County -41.70 20 663 Glynn County 3.37 10
662
Glascock
County -36.47 19 728 Stewart County 3.57 10
731
Taliaferro
County -36.27 19 759 Worth County 3.89 9
605 Baldwin County -35.09 18 680
Jeff Davis
County 4.35 9
681
Jefferson
County -34.86 18 634 Coffee County 4.54 9
721
Richmond
County -33.78 18 623 Catoosa County 4.82 9
619 Calhoun County -33.48 18 779 Jefferson City 4.94 9
661 Gilmer County -31.56 18 789 Thomasville City 5.77 8
765 Calhoun City -31.13 18 678 Jackson County 6.14 8
720
Randolph
County -30.63 18 716 Pulaski County 6.57 8
611 Bibb County -30.45 18 793 Vidalia City 6.64 8
627
Chattooga
County -28.28 17 714 Pike County 6.83 8
745
Thomaston-
Upson County -28.23 17 737 Tift County 7.08 8
630 Clay County -28.05 17 766 Carrollton City 7.14 7
724 Screven County -27.96 17 649 Early County 7.20 7
772 Dalton City -27.67 17 640 Crisp County 7.50 7
729 Sumter County -27.25 17 757 Wilkes County 7.51 7
785 Rome City -26.58 17 639 Crawford County 7.55 7
712 Pickens County -25.99 17 740 Treutlen County 7.68 7
Georgia Department of Education
Richard Woods, State Superintendent of Schools
October 27, 2017 • Page 8 of 15
All Rights Reserved
631 Clayton County -25.05 17 707 Newton County 8.53 7
699
Meriwether
County -23.74 16 687 Laurens County 8.65 7
632 Clinch County -23.65 16 683 Johnson County 9.18 6
671
Haralson
County -22.61 16 756 Wilcox County 9.20 6
715 Polk County -22.45 16 665 Grady County 9.35 6
679 Jasper County -22.29 16 738 Toombs County 9.37 6
700 Miller County -22.15 16 698 McIntosh County 9.46 6
654 Evans County -21.98 16 606 Banks County 9.52 6
726 Spalding County -21.62 16 616 Bulloch County 9.89 6
784 Pelham City -21.57 16 781 Marietta City 10.56 6
657 Floyd County -20.70 16 752 Webster County 10.69 6
711 Peach County -20.61 16 622 Carroll County 10.87 6
644 DeKalb County -19.80 16 607 Barrow County 11.31 6
709
Oglethorpe
County -18.93 16 620 Camden County 11.87 6
741 Troup County -18.62 16 645 Dodge County 11.97 6
732 Tattnall County -17.43 16 727 Stephens County 12.45 6
614 Brooks County -17.39 16 751 Wayne County 12.70 6
758
Wilkinson
County -17.15 16 696 Marion County 13.37 6
669 Hall County -16.84 16 747 Walton County 13.50 5
755
Whitfield
County -16.39 15 633 Cobb County 14.27 5
733 Taylor County -16.38 15 722 Rockdale County 14.45 5
647
Dougherty
County -16.26 15 717 Putnam County 14.59 5
625
Chatham
County -15.50 15 668
Habersham
County 14.90 5
635 Colquitt County -15.38 15 667 Gwinnett County 15.94 5
767 Cartersville City -15.06 15 660 Fulton County 16.18 5
624 Charlton County -14.98 15 676 Houston County 18.94 4
652 Elbert County -14.17 15 626
Chattahoochee
County 19.85 4
739 Towns County -13.58 15 636 Columbia County 20.24 4
603 Bacon County -13.23 14 666 Greene County 20.81 4
Georgia Department of Education
Richard Woods, State Superintendent of Schools
October 27, 2017 • Page 9 of 15
All Rights Reserved
742 Turner County -13.18 14 763 Bremen City 21.52 4
673 Hart County -13.04 14 719 Rabun County 21.75 4
618 Butts County -12.96 14 672 Harris County 21.91 4
701 Mitchell County -11.98 14 674 Heard County 22.01 4
682 Jenkins County -11.64 14 686 Lanier County 22.68 4
685 Lamar County -10.30 13 690 Lincoln County 23.72 4
675 Henry County -10.06 13 688 Lee County 24.38 3
601 Appling County -9.74 13 656 Fayette County 24.55 3
734 Telfair County -9.12 13 744 Union County 25.37 3
736 Thomas County -8.53 13 609 Ben Hill County 25.80 3
705 Murray County -8.25 13 791 Trion City 26.16 3
746 Walker County -7.97 13 643 Decatur County 26.21 3
750
Washington
County -7.92 13 651
Effingham
County 26.68 3
684 Jones County -7.29 12 691 Long County 26.78 3
638 Coweta County -7.02 12 702 Monroe County 29.24 3
706
Muscogee
County -6.78 12 695 Madison County 30.04 3
637 Cook County -6.29 12 704 Morgan County 30.25 3
703
Montgomery
County -6.27 12 692 Lowndes County 34.10 3
642 Dawson County -5.46 12 693 Lumpkin County 34.73 3
659 Franklin County -5.23 12 769
Chickamauga
City 35.05 3
735 Terrell County -4.20 11 613 Brantley County 36.00 3
774 Dublin City -3.67 11 713 Pierce County 39.42 2
615 Bryan County -2.92 11 725 Seminole County 40.26 2
648 Douglas County -2.59 11 723 Schley County 40.73 2
664 Gordon County -2.24 11 612 Bleckley County 42.66 2
604 Baker County -2.07 11 602 Atkinson County 43.24 2
650 Echols County -1.08 11 753 Wheeler County 43.54 2
628
Cherokee
County -0.98 11 771 Commerce City 47.33 1
677 Irwin County -0.61 11 764 Buford City 50.31 1
754 White County -0.40 11 658 Forsyth County 53.35 1
Georgia Department of Education
Richard Woods, State Superintendent of Schools
October 27, 2017 • Page 10 of 15
All Rights Reserved
697
McDuffie
County -0.39 11 773 Decatur City 56.57 1
629 Clarke County -0.22 11 748 Ware County 57.34 1
608 Bartow County -0.11 11 610 Berrien County 58.49 1
655 Fannin County -0.01 11 708 Oconee County 59.45 1
641 Dade County 0.99 11
Please note that grant awards will be made subject to approval by the Georgia State Board of
Education. Awards will be determined based on rank (highest score first) and available funding.
Therefore, it should be noted that a score of 75 or higher does not guarantee funding. After the
selection process, applicants who were not awarded funding will receive copies of the readers’
comments.
Grant Period
The performance period for the L4GA grant is three years.
A grant award is made available for an approved performance period of three
years. Continuation funds beyond year one are contingent upon the evidence and progress as
documented in the annual evaluation report, increased student achievement as documented in the
required common data elements, and performance based on the approved plan and budget
timeline. Please note that a sub-grantee approved by the State Board of Education may not
charge expenses to its L4GA grant before the beginning of the grant period, which is the day of
State Board approval. The awardee will receive 20% start-up funding for initial grant
implementation. After performance plans and budget timelines are approved for year one, the
State Board will award year one funding. Each year, beyond year one, a new performance plan
and budget timeline will be submitted with a request for continued funding by the State Board of
Education.
Awards Grant awards will be made to districts with the highest composite score. Because grants must be
sizable in order to accomplish the goals of the literacy plan, per pupil allocations will be similar
to grant awards of the past three cohorts. Once all scores are tallied, per pupil allocations will be
determined based on October 2017 FTE reports.
Georgia Department of Education
Richard Woods, State Superintendent of Schools
October 27, 2017 • Page 11 of 15
All Rights Reserved
Award Amounts
The GADOE will award sub-grants that will be significant in size in order to achieve the goals
set forth in the project.
Funding for the L4GA grant to LEAs and nonprofit early learning organizations and/or agencies
will be based on a per pupil allocation. Funding will be provided for all classrooms including
special education, CTAE, Title I and ELL. Funding will be awarded according to pupil full-time
equivalent (FTE) count for school-aged children. For funding purposes, the October 2017 FTE
report will be used for this grant application.
Sustainability
Sustainability planning is a requirement of the L4GA project. Sustainability planning should be
embedded throughout the application.
Community partners and organizations can be a critical link to sustaining L4GA projects beyond
the grant period. Funded applicants must bring together community organizations, P-20
partners, and RESAs with local schools and centers to determine how to leverage resources
within the community.
Fiscal Requirements
Georgia Online Reporting System (GAORS), the Consolidated Application Portal (CONAPP)
and the Invoice Application are the required reporting and accounting systems designated by
GaDOE to help ensure uniform, standard and accurate reporting of fiscal data on the use of
funds.
Any person, agency, etc., debarred from receiving Federal funds is not eligible to apply for
a L4GA project grant.
Responsibilities of a Fiscal Agent
The following are some of the expectations, roles, and responsibilities of a fiscal agent:
1. As the official grant recipient, all awards must be adopted by the local Board of
Education (LEAs) or local Board of Directors (non-LEAs).
2. Administer the grant from award to closeout in accordance with all applicable laws and
regulations
Georgia Department of Education
Richard Woods, State Superintendent of Schools
October 27, 2017 • Page 12 of 15
All Rights Reserved
3. Serve as the organizational representative and point of contact for all business
management aspects of the award agreement
4. Apply appropriate management controls using management systems, checklists, and
records
i. Internal Controls:
a. Safeguard assets; ensure reliability of accounting data and grant
terms and conditions
ii. Operating Controls:
a. Fiduciary Procedural Manuals; Budgetary Control System
iii. Accounting Controls:
a. Implement controls to ensure reliability of recorded financial data
b. Maintain appropriate level of transaction review and authorization
c. Develop and implement proper procurement procedures and cash
management procedures that are well defined
d. Develop procedures that facilitate timely review and audit of
financial activity
iv. Compliance Controls:
a. Consider mechanisms to monitor and review compliance with
grant terms (e.g. ensure grant funds are disbursed only to eligible
recipients)
b. Ensure that all expenditures/disbursements are consistent with the
objectives of the grant award and comply with applicable Federal,
state and local laws and regulations governing the project and use
of funds (e.g. OMB Circulars A-87, A-21 and A-122 Cost
Principles, Regulatory and Non-Regulatory Guidance, EDGAR,
and Code of Federal Regulations)
v. Document Control System:
a. Develop written documentation of adequate internal operating and
accounting controls that demonstrate evidence of controls related
to grant compliance.
5. Assemble appropriate staff resources and communicate all compliance requirements and
resources of the grant.
6. Keep abreast of changes in policies, procedures or requirements and continue to advise
project staff of grant requirements.
7. Request any further “prior approvals” when identified.
8. Prepare necessary reports:
i. Source Documentation
Georgia Department of Education
Richard Woods, State Superintendent of Schools
October 27, 2017 • Page 13 of 15
All Rights Reserved
a. Appropriately support transactions entered into the grantee’s
system
b. Documentation tracks each grant transaction and support the
validity of financial data reported
c. Maintain separate/clean funding lines for L4GA funds
ii. Audit Trail
a. The lowest level of detail the system should provide is
documentation that supports all transactions (e.g. invoices,
contracts, purchase orders)
b. The overall recordkeeping system should be able to trace financial
statement balances through the grantee’s general ledger, cash
books and other journals
c. Amounts claimed on financial statements and reports accurately
reflect the accounting books and records from which they were
prepared
9. Make the most of site visits by GaDOE to enhance project, show organizational strength
and demonstrate commitment to the project
10. Keep GaDOE and the public aware and informed about grant project progress
11. Evaluate the extent to which measurable project objectives are being met
12. Liquidate all obligations incurred under the award within the set deadline
13. Ensure and oversee the performance of final audits and resolution of findings
14. Establish adequate system for records retention
15. Completion Reports are due no later than 30 days after the end of each fiscal year
Project Reports and Evaluation
Grantees will be required to prepare and submit an end of year evaluation report no later than
June 30th of each year.
Details of the Application While we have provided applicants with a hard copy of the grant application, the final submitted
application will be uploaded into our online grant management system, Fluid Review. All
applications are to be submitted in Fluid Review by February 1, 2018 at 5PM. As detailed in
the grant application, applicants are required to stay within a prescribed word count for each
section. These word counts were derived by reviewing Cohort One, Cohort Two and Cohort
Three funded applications to derive a general length for each section. Cohort Four applicants are
expected to stay within these word counts as they prepare their grant applications.
Georgia Department of Education
Richard Woods, State Superintendent of Schools
October 27, 2017 • Page 14 of 15
All Rights Reserved
Fluid Review Fluid Review is an online data management system that will support all of grant development
and management activities in one location. It establishes work flow so that applicants can upload
and manage their grant development. will also manage the grant review from this site as well.
GaDOE will host training on how to utilize the system at a future date.
Application Review and Selection Process
Phase 1 – Reader Review and Scoring Impartial readers will evaluate and score each application based on the quality of the proposed
activities and the capability of the applicant to implement the proposed project. These readers are
comprised of experienced grant readers with expertise in early learning, elementary literacy, and
secondary literacy. These readers will also have expertise in literacy assessment and the Georgia
Standards of Excellence.
Phase 2 – Federal Compliance Review and Analysis of Applications GaDOE staff will review all applications that have a quality score greater than or equal to 75.
Applications with scores of at least 75 and that qualify for competitive priority will receive an
additional five points in this phase. Applications will be read by GaDOE staff in order determine
if the grant meets L4GA project requirements and adheres to state, Federal, and local laws.
Applications that do not meet the established criteria will not proceed to Phase 4.
**Please note all readers’ scores, GaDOE decisions, and State Board of Education (SBOE)
decisions are final. These decisions may not be appealed.